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Poetry Reading, Andrea Read

Poetry Reading DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Poet:  Andrea Read Date:  23 December 2019, Monday Time:  5 p.m. Place: Bilkent Library Art Gallery   You are cordially invited to a reading by the poet Andrea Read at the Bilkent Library Art Gallery at 5pm on Monday 23 December. Andrea’s poems have appeared most recently in Barrow Street, Black Rabbit […]

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“The Author in Nineteenth – Century Literary Culture : Romanticism to Formalism”, Andrea Selleri

Department of English Language and Literature Seminar The Author in Nineteenth – Century Literary Culture : Romanticism to Formalism Speaker : Andrea Selleri Date: January 16, 2020 Time: 14.40 - 16.00 Location: G 160   The Author in Nineteenth-Century Literary Culture: Romanticism to Formalism The significance of the relationship between the author and the work is among the most contentious issues in the theory of criticism. In an anglophone context, […]

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“Hating Rubens: Charlotte Brontë, Anti-Catholicism, and the Limits of Female Self-Fashioning in Victorian England”, Aleksandar Stevic

Time: 14:40 to 16:00, Monday 20 January 2020. Location: G 160   Aleksandar Stevic Hating Rubens: Charlotte Brontë, Anti-Catholicism, and the Limits of Female Self-Fashioning in Victorian England   What form can female development take in a culture committed to severely limiting the rights of women? What kinds of narratives about female education and growth can be produced by a […]

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“Learning after Athens: Equity, Grace, and Prophecy in Milton’s Paradise Regained”, Deni Kasa

Time: 14:40 to 16:00, Thursday 23 January 2020. Location: G 160   Deni Kasa Learning after Athens: Equity, Grace, and Prophecy in Milton’s Paradise Regained   Although Milton’s poetry is now understood to be republican, Paradise Regained poses a problem: it rejects Athenian learning in favour of the prophetic inspiration of the Holy Spirit. On this evidence, criticism has increasingly […]

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“Pause for Thought: Brackets in Renaissance Romance”,Florence Hazrat

Time: 14:40 to 16:00, Thursday 30 January 2020. Location: G 160   Florence Hazrat Pause for Thought: Brackets in Renaissance Romance When opening a Renaissance book, it is brackets which populate the pages. What was it about these signs which attracted early modern writers? And why were they particularly prominent in romances, those stories about knights lost in magical woods? […]

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“Friendship as a Means to Freedom”, Allauren Forbes

Friendship as a Means to Freedom By Allauren Forbes (University of Pennsylvania, Philosophy) Date: Tuesday 4th February, 2020 Time: 1640-1800 Place: H-232 Abstract: Friendship has been a subject of interest to Western philosophy since at least Plato and Aristotle, and the women thinking and writing about friendship in the Early Modern period did so within a context indebted to these […]

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Contesting Disciplinary Boundaries in the Humanities and Beyond

Contesting Disciplinary Boundaries in the Humanities and Beyond PANEL DISCUSSION Etienne Charrière (EDEB) Alev Çinar (POLS) Patrick Fessenbecker (CCI) Mustafa Nakeeb (CCI & PHIL) Moderated by Colleen Kennedy-Karpat (COMD) Bilkent University Initiative for Interdisciplinary Humanities Date:   February 10, 2020 (Monday) Time:12:40-13:30 Place:FFB-06  

“The Theory of Every Thing: Toward a Symmetry-Based Metaphysics of Matter”, David Schroeren

By David Schroeren (Princeton, Philosophy) Date: Tuesday 11th February, 2020 Time: 1640-1800 Place: H-232 Abstract: We are used to thinking that physics describes the world as fundamentally composed of matter: the fundamental building blocks of the world, like elementary particles or quantum fields. But when we look at modern physics and the pronouncements of its practitioners, we find forceful rejections of this familiar picture. […]

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“A New Metaphysical Explication of Infinitesimals”,Lu Chen (UMass, Philosophy)

A New Metaphysical Explication of Infinitesimals By Lu Chen (UMass, Philosophy) Date: Tuesday 18th February, 2020 Time: 1640-1800 Place: H-232   Abstract: Infinitesimals are widely used in physics and mathematics, but are considered merely heuristic due to a lack of rigorous understanding. Smooth Infinitesimal Analysis (SIA), alternatively known as Synthetic Differential Geometry, is the most developed mathematical system for regimenting […]

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“Göbekli Tepe: Digging the ´Zero Point’ in Time”, Dr. Lee Clare

The Department of Archaeology organizes a Lecture given by Dr. Lee Clare, the scientific director of the excavations of Göbekli Tepe:  “Göbekli Tepe: Digging the ´Zero Point' in Time” on Wednesday 19 February at 17:40 PM. It will take place in the Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, Room FFB-05. GE 250 & 251 points will be given. We look […]

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Friedrich Klopstock’s “Heretical” Poetics: Der Messias & the Case of Doubting Thomas

Bilkent University Library is pleased to invite you to attend the CCI Colloquium Series event! Title: Friedrich Klopstock’s “Heretical” Poetics: Der Messias & the Case of Doubting Thomas Place/Date/Time: Library Art Gallery, 21 February 2020, 4.40 p.m. Short speaker bio: Matthew Stoltz earned his PhD in 2019 from the Department of German Studies at Cornell University. His research explores the […]

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“Taking Aesthetic Obligations Seriously”, Anthony Cross

Philosophy colloquium, Anthony Cross Taking Aesthetic Obligations Seriously By Anthony Cross (Texas State, Philosophy) Date: Thursday 27th, 2020 Time: 1540-1710 Place: H-232 Abstract: Are there any aesthetic obligations? The standard story of aesthetic normativity says no: aesthetic value may generate reasons, but these are never obligatory. I first introduce several cases that demonstrate that the standard story is incorrect, and that obligations […]

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